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Fake Heroes: Ten False Icons and How they Altered the Course of History

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From the author of Fake History, Otto English, comes a shocking yet hilarious look at ten of the greatest liars from our past, examining these previously unquestioned idols and exposing what they were trying to hide.

Was Che Guevara really a revolutionary hero?

Should Mother Teresa be honoured as a saint?

Is Henry V actually England's greatest king?

And why does JFK's legend continue to grow?

Having exposed some of the greatest lies ever told in Fake History, journalist Otto English turns his attention to some of history's biggest (and most beloved) figures.

Whether it's virtuous leaders in just wars, martyrs sacrificing all for a cause, or innovators changing the world for the better, down the centuries supposedly great men and women have risen to become household names, saints and heroes. But just how deserving are they of their reputations?

Exploring everything from Captain Scott's reckless hunt for glory and Andy Warhol's flagrant thievery to Coco Chanel's murky Nazi past, Otto English dives into the hidden lives of some of history's most recognisable names. Scrutinising figures from the worlds of art, politics, business, religion and royalty, he brings to light the murkier truths they would rather have kept buried away, at the same time as celebrating the unsung heroes lost to time.

Fake Heroes exposes the truth of the past and helps us understand why that matters today.

432 pages, Paperback

First published May 25, 2023

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Otto English

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 89 reviews
Profile Image for S V B.
117 reviews9 followers
December 26, 2023
It's taken me a while to get to reviewing this properly because I wanted to make sure I got everything completely correct fact-wise and also because I wanted to make sure my own biases wouldn't come into play too much. WELL! Sit down pal because I'm autistic and Heroic Age polar expeditions are my life. BUCKLE UP!

I was really looking forward to this book because I loved Fake History, and for the most part this was an entertaining and informative sequel. However, as soon as I saw that there was a chapter on Captain Scott my heart sank a little bit, and I thought to myself "I bet he's only used the Huntford". Guess bloody what, I was right!
For those uninitiated, Roland Huntford's 'Scott and Amundsen' is incredibly biased against Scott, and includes falsehoods that have been debunked since, some of which have been merrily repeated in Fake Heroes. *sigh*

A little way into the chapter on Scott we are told: "In the Heroic Age, leading a grand polar expedition was a surefire path to swift promotion, medals and glory, and Scott was a hugely, hugely ambitious individual who chased after it all." Scott is presented as extremely egotistical and selfish. We are not told that the reason Scott needed to get himself promoted as quickly as possible was due to becoming financially responsible for his mother and numerous sisters, after his father died leaving bad debts resulting in the family becoming destitute.

A quote from Cherry-Garrard is then cut down to make Scott appear hopeless and emotional, the full quote being "He [Scott] cried more easily than any man I have ever known. What pulled Scott through was character, sheer good grain which ran over and under and through his weaker self and clamped it all together." We only get the bit about him crying.
The idea that Scott was "utterly humourless" might be an easy dig at his character but is not supported by facts. He is described as 'quick to laugh and with an infectious smile' in many other biographies (Huxley, Fiennes, etc etc)

Now, to the dogs: Scott took dogs on the Discovery having taken Nansen's advice, and their diet of fish was also recommended by Nansen (not Scott). According to the late great Wally Herbert, it takes a person around two years to become competent at running dogs, Scott had no chance of managing this, whereas the Norwegians would have been running dog teams for years, due to, y'know, living in the Arctic.

On the Discovery expedition farthest South, there is actually very little evidence that Scott and Shackleton fell out. This particular story only comes from Albert Armitage, who wasn't present at the time, and grew angry at Scott for trying to send him home on the relief ship Morning, to avoid a scandal at home. A myth repeated over and over doesn't make it true. Shackleton went especially to meet Scott when he arrived back from the expedition, and Scott chaired a dinner for Shackleton when he arrived home from his Nimrod expedition in 1909.

Regarding the ponies taken on the Terra Nova expedition, we are not told that the anecdotal evidence that white ponies were better for the conditions than brown, came from Shackleton, who had had great success with them on his Nimrod expedition. We are also not told that they were Manchurian ponies, used to incredibly cold, snowy conditions.
I'm unsure why the food taken on the expedition is mentioned at all - they needed enough supplies to last 65 men YEARS - of course they took a lot of food?!

In comparing the Norwegian and British teams we are told: "He [Amundsen] and his tight knit team were all properly kitted out in wolfskin and reindeer fur and had kept perfectly warm. Scott's men were dressed in Burberry weather-proof coats, provided by their sponsor, which would have been fine for a windy walk in the Fells, but which were fairly useless for Arctic conditions." - this is just plain wrong - the Norwegian team were dogsledding, meaning that they were doing much less physical work than the British team, who were manhauling (pulling the sledges themselves). If furs were worn for manhauling, the wearer would overheat and sweat, the sweat would freeze and the wearer would be at risk of hypothermia and death. The Burberry canvas smocks were breathable and avoided overheating. This is why modern day explorers do not wear furs. (Also this is the Antarctic, not the Arctic 😉)

Much is made of Scott's sentimentality around the killing and eating of dogs, as if it's a failing or a weakness. This seems incredibly odd to me, would you want to kill and eat your pets? Don't think so buddy. If anything the failing here was becoming too attached to the dogs, unlike the Norwegian team who saw them as more of a means to an end. It ends up sounding like "Scott liked animals, god what a loser!"
If it was a 'myth' that the Terra Nova expedition was foremost a scientific endeavour, it's unlikely that the men would have bothered to stop to collect rock samples on their way back from the pole. It just doesn't make sense. (The rocks collected turned out to be hugely important and proved that Antarctica was once forested, cha-ching!).

We are told that Kathleen Scott and Nansen were lovers, and that their affair was consumated in a Berlin hotel, there is absolutely no reliable evidence for this whatsoever, and it appears to have been invented by Huntford. They may have been friends, and Nansen may have had a crush on her, but hey, Kathleen was a vivacious and sociable lady, she had a lot of pals, it doesn't mean she was banging all of them, GOSH! Also I think this may have been one of the things Huntford had to apologise to the Scott family over (plus pay court costs) because it's not truuuueeeee 🤠

This idea that Scott was a failure and a bungler is one that has been debunked numerous times over the past twenty or so years, we now know, thanks to climate data collected on the expedition (y'know, the primarily scientific expedition) that that particular year was incredibly cold, a huge anomaly. This would have resulted in more energy and fuel being used to keep the men fed and warm. The fuel cans had seals that perished in this unusual cold and leaked. Scott and his men were killed by the weather and unlucky timing. This worked well for Amundsen's team as the surface was good for dogsledding and they had their wee furs (more info can be found in 'The Coldest March' by Susan Solomon, whose research on the Ozone layer is actually mentioned in a later chapter of this very book!)

The reason the Norwegians were (and still are) so good at polar travel is because it's where they live, they do it all the time, they learn to ski before they can walk. Nansen is a towering figure in Norway, and rightfully so (just don't Google his nudes). Amundsen will always be a polar hero, but he is not so highly regarded due to falling in with the likes of Mussolini and his big interest in The Fash during his later years.

If you made it this far, thank you for sticking with me!
Overall I really enjoyed the rest of this book, although I was disappointed by the one-sided research which seemed to just be from Huntford (boo!) and the 1948 film starring John Mills. I get there's a narrative to stick to but come on, Scott does not belong in a book called Fake Heroes, next to a nazi sympathiser (Coco Chanel really got up to some japes eh?).
260 reviews2 followers
July 30, 2023
I've read Fake History but the author seriously outdoes himself with this effort. Wouldn't normally buy something that tears down JFK (not that even now I'm totally onboard!) but the way he builds up to the 10 different subjects is fantastic. I'm sure there will be plenty of people out there who consider it all too 'woke', but English doesn't do anything to dismiss the various achievements - he's just not blind to their foibles either.
Profile Image for David Kemple.
122 reviews
July 17, 2023
Really interesting stories nicely linked together, however can’t be given a higher rating due to the editing. Easily the worst proofread book I’ve read, with loads of pretty jarring mistakes and really erratic punctuation.
Profile Image for Deirdre Clancy.
258 reviews12 followers
May 13, 2025
Let's get the problems out of the way first: this is a really inadequately edited book. There are numerous typos and other errors scattered throughout it, which no publishing house worth its salt should have let through. The writing is uneven at times and seems almost as if it was rushed, while the narrative is also fascinating in places. The overall premise of the book, however, is difficult to argue with, that 'History, much like modern life, is in short full of bullies, self-promoting charlatans, bigots, bastards, and liars.' Another way of putting it is that 'the person who shouts the loudest gets all the acclaim,' which is mentioned by way of explaining why Thomas Edison is widely regarded as the inventor of the light bulb, when it's not really that simple.

Many of the icons covered in this book lied spectacularly during their lifetimes in some manner as a means to achieving their iconic status. Some of them weren't particularly competent, and achieved wealth and fame largely on the back of the efforts of others around them.

The fact that icons aren't always very balanced, decent people doesn't come as a massive surprise: this is something most thoughtful adults will have figured out before reading this tome. A certain proportion of society's winners routinely cut ethical corners. There are even famous entertainers who have actively admitted noticing patterns among themselves and their contemporaries of these very phenomena, usually traceable back to a childhood of parental loss or emotional neglect, which creates an inordinate need for public adulation in adulthood. Of course, this is speaking very generally, and many of these individuals have a genuine moral compass to accompany their talent, but the pattern is definitely there.

Coco Chanel grew up mostly in an orphanage run by nuns. Her flair for fashion was real, and she was industrious, but as she became hugely successful, a pretty dark side to her personality emerged. She was a Nazi collaborator who treated her staff with contempt, was unethical in her business dealings, and had a string of affairs with fellow fascist sympathizers.

Captain Scott became an explorer not due to any passion for adventure and scientific discovery, but purely because arctic explorers were the rockstars of the world at the end of the 19th century and into the early 20th century. In pursuit of fame and glory, he blithely led a team of men to miserable deaths because he simply didn't have the practical knowledge that Norwegians involved in exploration had at the time. Scott never had the humility or self-awareness to acquire the requisite knowledge before embarking on his journey. Despite this, Scott remains lauded as a great leader to this day in certain quarters.

The author's problem with Andy Warhol is somewhat unclear. I mean, we know that many of Warhol's works weren't actually physically produced by Warhol himself, so this is not really new information. There was never any sense in which Andy Warhol tried to claim otherwise, as his entire artistic life was about blurring the boundaries between consumerism and art. Nevertheless, Otto English doesn't like Warhol at all, which is understandable in some ways, but not comprehensively explained.

The chapter on Henry V is a description of that king's foolhardiness in war, but then toward the end has a strange segue into Australian history, with the connection tenuous at best. It's clear the author is not a monarchist, but the writing fails to give a reason for veering into the 19th-century outback from Medieval England so suddenly. Even the comparison of Henry V to Putin makes a bit more sense.

Then there's Mother Teresa, which is controversial obviously to many, but sadly seems to have some truth to it, as many people who volunteered or who joined her order are now coming out and speaking about their experiences of the atmosphere created around her and the shortcomings of the hospices and orphanages in her lifetime. It should be noted that there are still many people who would defend her passionately and who question the truth of these observations. It also seems rather churlish to bring in her spiritual difficulties as evidence of fakery. There are many names within Catholicism who have gone through dark nights of the soul, sometimes lasting years, but still continued on with their work. In fact, this is often the mark of a true saint within Catholicism.

The John F. Kennedy chapter is unsurprising. He was a voracious serial adulterer who was fulfilling the ambitions of his father by going into politics; this is already well known, but it's good that people feel more free to write about it these days. There's definitely no harm in being real about the actuality of people's lives versus the image projected by their publicists.

Some of the individuals covered in this book became icons by accident or by dint of their good looks. Che Guevara was one of these. Had his face not been made famous by the promulgation of his image across the world, he might have been just another guerilla allied with Castro whose name was only known by far-left devotees. Instead, he happened to have a face that had icon written all over it and ended up incessantly emblazoned on middle-class university student bedsit walls and t-shirts across the world, as much of a capitalist consumerist brand as Coca Cola.

Guevara himself comes across as somewhat politically naive as a young adult. His upbringing was quite well to do, and such were the class divisons in the Argentina of his day that people of his class thought nothing of the teenage Guevara routinely raping the family maid. This was regarded as a part of the function of maids at the time in Argentina, apparently. So we can dispense with the notion of the romantic revolutionary hero who loved the working classes quite readily, then.

This is the type of book I would normally think is a healthy counterpoint to our celebrity-obsessed, image-oriented culture, but as mentioned, the writing could have done with some tightening up from an editor. I'd give it four stars were it not for this fact. It's a laudable project to correct misconceptions about cultural golden calves.
Profile Image for Chris.
151 reviews12 followers
February 15, 2024
I was with it until the bafflingly furious invective in the Che Guevara chapter.

The way English describes it, Castro and Guevara were clueless, vainglorious thugs who were no better than the previous regime, and are comparable to Nazis. He claims their incompetence destroyed the island's economy and enslaved its people... but then, practically as an afterthought, he begrudgingly explains the island's surprisingly high (and in some cases world leading) quality of life indicators, pouring quite a lot of cold water on most of what he'd just argued.

It's a bizarrely angry chapter, replete with sanctimonious liberal finger-wagging (a phrase I notice at least one other reviewer has used). It read as especially strange, as in the previous chapter he'd cogently argued that the Kennedy brothers' bullheaded anticommunism was a weakness of theirs.

So after that, the trust was gone - fatal for a history book. After that I was constantly troubled by the thought that every other chapter in the book was a similarly facile, biased, and uncharitable hit piece on the various historical figures covered.

Overall there's some entertaining stories and some decent prose, but I hesitate to recommend it as I have a strong suspicion it's just as erroneous as the myths it sets out to bust.
Profile Image for Aucy Lustin.
16 reviews
April 25, 2024
3.5 rounded. brilliantly written , read in stages over half a year due to the non fictional genre and learnt a lot .
Profile Image for Bjorn Bakker.
100 reviews
April 2, 2025
Fun and enlightening read. Makes you aware that our collective memory of the past is subject to a lot more bias than we acknowledge.
Profile Image for Anelia.
183 reviews20 followers
July 3, 2025
An interesting and thought-provoking book. I did found a few of the stories very interesting and have found myself discussing with other people. At the same time, unfortunately many of the stories of "fake heroes" I didn't know much about and/or didn't see as "heroes", so I was personally less interested in/shocked by their stories. I will most likely check out some of the other books by Otto English.
Profile Image for Mike.
59 reviews3 followers
January 3, 2024
I put off listening to this for a while simply because of the author’s name. Otto English, what kind of pseudonym is Otto English? Is this going to be some “cancel culture revisionist” thing? I mention all this in case you’re having similar thoughts. Let me reassure you now, your worries are unfounded. Go into this open-minded and you will be rewarded. ‘Fake Heroes’ is a must for anyone interested in history; mostly 20th Century with just one trip back to Tudor England for a dispassionate look at Henry V.

If, like me, you’ve ever wondered what was so special about JFK or what exactly Che Guevara is famous for besides that poster, or why Andy Warhol is lionised in the art world, to name three of the subjects in ‘Fake Heroes’, this book is going to expand your horizons considerably. There are, essentially, ten essays, loosely interlinked, which build up quite detailed portraits of their subjects. These essays sometimes show our heroes to be fallible human beings (like my boyhood hero Captain Scott) but sometimes we’re left with an impression of someone so warped (like Mother Theresa) that you wonder if…well, you know what, I’ll let you listen and decide for yourself. If you’re adult enough to step out of the echo chamber that is social media and be challenged, this book is an eye-opener.

I’m still not sure about “Otto English” for a pseudonym, but I doubt I will listen to a better audiobook this year.
Profile Image for Louise Culmer.
1,201 reviews51 followers
March 18, 2025
Otto English tells us about ten heroes and tells us why they are not as heroic as we think they are. Most of what he tells us is already common knowledge - all of these people have been freely criticised many times before. Most of the objects of his ire are 20th century ones, but he plunges back to the 15th century for his royal hero - Henry V. He worries a good deal about Henry V - but how many people nowadays really regard Henry V as a hero? For that matter, many of his other heroes seem a bit passé, how much is Captain Scott revered today for instance? One or two surprised me - I’ve never thought of Andy Warhol as particularly heroic for instance. He doesn’t mention Brexit or Donald Trump as often as in his previous book, though they pop up from time to time. And he manages to get another dig in at Ladybird Books (he really hates Ladybird). This is a rather odd book.
Profile Image for Monica Willyard Moen.
1,385 reviews33 followers
May 8, 2024
This book may be factually correct, but I did not enjoy reading it because it is written in a very cynical and hard edge style. The feeling I had while reading it was like being outside on a hot July day and being offered a can of beer. I opened it to discover that it is warm, Bitter dark beer, not refreshing at all. Some of the people in this book really do seem to be villains instead of heroes. However, I suspect the truth is more like that all of us have some of the hero and some of the villains in us, and sometimes we let each have its way with our behavior.
Profile Image for JustAReader.
172 reviews
January 28, 2025
Where history books and the culture mostly ignore problematic behaviour of our historical and cultural icons, this book focuses on exactly that. Even though the author is overly critical of these figures, he does not downplay their positive contributions to society, if being made. His main goal is challenging the reader in thinking more critically in whom to make our hero and to do not put these people on a pedestal when they are not as perfect as they are portrayed to be.

Even though I mostly enjoyed the book, it could have profited from editing. At times, the author goes on extremely long tangents about some other historical figures, to illustrate a point he is trying to make. This could have easily been cut down, to focus more on the historical figure at hand.

Overall, I would recommend this book to anyone interested in history, especially a more critical examination of historical events and histories “greatest hero’s”.
Profile Image for Marilena Iovu.
210 reviews32 followers
December 19, 2024
Am citit FALSI EROI, editia apărută la Editura Litera tradusă de Ondine Dascalita. Autorul nu dezamăgește nici de această dată (am mai citit ISTORIE FALSĂ). Umor, ironie mușcătoare, informații bine documentate și redate captivant și accesibil, dezvăluiri care aruncă o nouă lumină asupra vieților unor personaje celebre. Mă așteptam ca Che Guevara să aibă o aură falsă, însă m-au luat prin surprindere unele detalii din relatările despre Maica Tereza, Coco Chanel sau chiar JFK.
De citit oricând, de către oricine sau de făcut cadou, are toate elementele unui divertisment de calitate.
Profile Image for Peter Fox.
464 reviews12 followers
January 24, 2025
This book demonstrates that many perceived heroic figures, such as Bader, Kennedy, Henry V, Captain Scott, etc, have feet made of clay. Rather than showing that they are problematic from a modern perspective as views have changed, English shows that they never had the right stuff to begin with and any contemporary consideration from a rational perspective would have found them wanting.

I found this book to be quite refreshing, but also a touch depressing. Too many scoundrels get lauded due to them satisfying vested interests.
136 reviews
August 28, 2024
What a fascinating book this is! Otto English writes with humour, wit and great intelligence about people like Andy Warhol, Mother Teresa and Che Guevara. We all know about them - right? But it turns out that a lot of what I thought I knew was fiction, myth-making by the heroes themselves or their promoters.

Lovely that each chapter finishes with a real, albeit not well-known character who deserves true acclaim.
40 reviews
July 21, 2024
Written for those (me) who skip to the ‘Controversies’ section on Wikipedia.
Profile Image for Codfather.
96 reviews
January 2, 2024
I loved his first book, Fake History, and I have to say this book surpasses that.

It is a tour de force sweeping away the sycophantic drivel told about our supposed heroes and instead gives us the facts about these individuals. It does not in any way set out to totally discredit their memories, but instead fill in the real human behind the myths. Tell the facts that have been airbrushed out of the picture for someone's benefit.

To any feminist reading this book, it will come as very little surprise as to the despicable lies, deceit and misogyny carried out against them in telling many historical discoveries.

I think if truth be told, it is at heart nothing but a tale of human failings and the skulduggery carried out in the name of propagandists and commercial interests. The lies and deceit by some are really quite disgusting if not surprising when appraised by C21's eyes and experience.

The one thing I will take away is the absolute propaganda and downright myths schools peddle in the name of history, happily leaving out the uncomfortable facts about empire, colonialism and conquest. Whether this be by dint of government requirement or collective social delusion I shall leave it to other readers to decide.

I would highly recommend reading this book, as it is not only informative but hugely enjoyable.
Profile Image for Kimilo.
45 reviews
August 4, 2025
If we could just rewrite all our history into a fairy tale! What a dream!
Otto English is on a vendetta against history and people and how dare them live lives different to his moral compass. Yes all of the "heroes" he goes through are flawed people and did things we sometimes gloss over, but the high horse from which Otto English is putting himself in an easy spot to fall from as well.
250 reviews
November 17, 2023
And I thought Hitchens was the top man when it came to hatchet jobs!
9 reviews
December 8, 2024
Excellent read but desperately needed proof-reading.
Profile Image for P. Goddard.
Author 8 books
January 26, 2025
The first two chapters of 'Fake Heroes' are deceptively readable except for the obvious use of stereotyped language where 'Otto English' (Andrew Scott) has made sure to toe the party line of his increasingly obvious political leanings.
The commentary on contemporary art in the chapter on Andy Warhol was enjoyable and, in my opinion, amusingly accurate.
Yet overall I found the book hateful and hard to read so I couldn't finish it.
The author's left leaning political ideology and religious convictions are made very clear in the book. Even explicitly stated. I find that absolutely hateful because people's biases are obvious from what they find interesting and choose to write about. It's not hard to interpret a writer's thoughts through what he or she writes about and how he or she writes, yet it's not appropriate to pass off a book as being historical in nature and about other people and then to write about one's self in a book.
I didn't choose to read the author's blog. I don't care about the author's thoughts and feelings because we're not all secretly friends and I don't know him. Hell I would have preferred not to be told that Otto English was a pen name for Andrew Scott since I don't see what the point of using a pen name is if you also give your real name. I simply wanted to read about 'Fake Heroes'. I don't think it was provided.
When I picked up this book and read the blurb I expected to read a dispassionate historical piece explaining how the 'Fake Heroes' had been misrepresented because they were obviously inherently flawed like all humans and had become the victims of idol worship due to confirmation bias. I assumed that would have implications for the celebrity/influencer culture or cults of personality of today as the blurb states, 'Fake Heroes exposes the truths of the past and helps us understand why they matter today.'
I never imagined, and indeed would not have purchased and attempted to read the book, had I been aware that the author would write in first person about his own thoughts, feeling, experiences and beliefs anywhere outside of the introduction or afterwards, because I don't care to know them. I don't generally read autobiographies because they're typically quite narcissistic.
I can't stand it. It's just like the news, and just like all contemporary popular media. People's personal opinions are everywhere seemingly indistinguishable (to them) from FACTS! It is unprofessional and disgusting.
I gave the book three stars because obviously this style of writing, based on it's increasing appearance is enjoyable to others, so people who like to sit around smugly congratulating themselves on their own cleverness and passing their own opinions off as equally worth people's attention as whatever professional undertaking they are currently supposed to be working on will probably love it. If you enjoyed Twitter before Elon Musk (not that I like X btw) this is definitely a book you'll love. Just don't break your own arms patting yourselves on the back when you find that you agree with everything in the book and knew all about it before you read it.
8 reviews
April 23, 2025
This is a decently interesting book, but I can't help coming away from it with the impression that the author is a bit up his own hole. Fake Heroes can be very engaging when Otto English is focused, but many of the chapters - particularly the one on Henry V, as others have pointed out - are difficult to read due to a lack of focus. The fresh perspective offered on popular history is novel, but there's a sense of confusion around whether this book is supposed to be a factual retelling, or a running commentary of the author's own opinions and insights. When English succeeds at combining the two, it's good, but when the technique fails, reading becomes an absolute drag.

I'm also not sure how much interest this book holds to non-British audiences. The front cover gives off the impression that the figures examined will be world-know icons - but I had no idea about half the characters discussed, because their fame seems to be limited to the UK. (Side note; I'm Irish, so it's not even like I'm that far removed from British culture!) That's not to say the insights offered aren't valuable, but I do think the presentation of the book is a bit misleading, and the British focus comes across as very insular to those not 'in the know'.

This also leads me to a personal irk with English's writing style. I won't say too much about it, because I know it's a bit unfair - but the prose is, at times, overwhelmingly British in its delivery.

This is without even getting into the many print errors that crop up, which are bizarre in their frequency. Overall, a mixed experience that felt like a bit of a let down.
4 reviews
February 12, 2025
I struggled through the couple of chapters and really couldn't get on with this book due in part to multiple basic editorial errors like misplaced commas and missing words at the end of some sentences, but also to the narrative voice which I just couldn't take to. I'm no expert or pedant really when it comes to punctuation and grammar, as I'm sure my writing here will confirm, but it was so bad in places that it was quite distracting and devalued the content of the text.

However, beginning with chapter 3, on Mother Teresa, I increasingly warmed to the book as I progressed through it. The writer has compiled interesting stories and made thoughtful observations, which, along with his occasional wryly humorous notes and glimpses into his own life, contributed significantly to my enjoyment of the book.

The last chapter is on John Wayne, somebody I personally have very little knowledge of or interest in. Despite this, I found this to be the most fascinating section, showcasing as it did all of the positive traits noted above, in particular a lot of quite moving personal material.

Overall, the book is well worth a read, and it might just prompt you to further research some of the subjects. I am particularly keen on a guy I had never heard of, Thomas Midgley, who, having caused two global catastrophes, "...had more impact on the atmosphere than any other single organism in human history".
Profile Image for Shehroze Ameen.
98 reviews7 followers
August 17, 2025
This was gifted to me by my brother and his missus. And I read through it in its entirety in one day.

My first introduction to Otto actually. And for what it is worth... it is good. It is a well documented analysis of the worst fraudsters in history, followed by what they did to the world that made it far worse.

I recommend reading this to prove to disgusting whites that they do not have a monopoly on condescension. And what's more, this book is substantially important in breaking myths associated with the people who had done more harm than good in the world.

Especially the World War II Veterans of Britain. A country which has chosen to disregard Alan Turing and still refuses to acknowledge his contributions officially is not worth my time. It makes me happy seeing it become a discount Pakistan. And one which cannot even do basic frameworks properly. I'm happy seeing it diminish in value.

This book especially is topical and yet, it also makes a lot of sense when you take into account the people it talks about and breaks down. People like JFK, Mother Theresa (The prototype Israeli), Che Guieverra, right on the cover, sure, but it also includes Winston Churchill too. And a worthwhile debunking of .

Recommended reading. You only need to read it once. Unless you have white acquaintances and you want to just make enemies off them (which is worth doing in 2025 ngl), then you should memorize what this book says.
Profile Image for Joe O'Donnell.
285 reviews6 followers
December 28, 2023
In perusing the jacket or sub-title of “Fake Heroes”, you might be under the impression that this book largely consists of the author relentlessly taking a machine gun to slaughter a series of sacred cows. But Otto English takes a more considered and thoughtful approach to the analysis of historical and cultural icons, and largely avoids contrarianism or foam-flecked polemics.

Instead, some of the most interesting sections of “Fake Heroes” are where Otto English shifts from iconoclasm against his ten chosen historical figures and focuses on the nature of mythologising and how – and why – society manufactures its heroes. Many of the icons in this book (Mother Theresa, JFK, the vile Nazi collaborator Coco Chanel) are “too big to fail” and tearing down these ‘fake heroes’ would do irreparable damage to the self-image of the societies that have created them. As English astutely notes, “sometimes in creating saints, society creates monsters instead.”
Profile Image for Jack Reilly Gillic.
147 reviews2 followers
January 26, 2025
Consistently engaging and entertaining deconstruction of the “Great Man” theory, with the carefully embellished reputations of Che Guevara, Theresa of Calcutta, Coco Channel and Andy Warhol ( among others) coming under much-need scrutiny and reevaluation.

The worst offenders however, are the Kennedy family, who developed the “Camelot” cult atop the corpse of the martyred JFK - quite possibly the most overrated figure of the 20th century.


On a broader level, all of this reveals the inherent vulnerability of biography as an art form: the focus on a particular human life without sufficient context on wider historical threads.

My only critique of Mr English: a few too many topical references online culture, particularly the continuing decline of twitter, which means that certain aspects of the book will age poorly.

A great, highly accessible history book.
75 reviews
July 12, 2025
The first thing I need to say, and it's not something I've ever noticed before in a book, is that the editing is terrible.

After that, well it is a fun read, but maybe not terribly fair. I knew some of the stories, some were completely new. The taking down is delicious at times, but you can't help but feel it is a bit one sided. In the same way the author says these people were largely heroes because of the myth created about them, the author expects us to take his word that they were bad people. You can't really form a true opinion of someone based on 30 pages and it would be unfair on them to treat what is written here as being the whole picture. As one exceptional reviewer noted, the Scott chapter seems also to rely on limited source material.

So, it's a badly edited yet fun book. Just don't expect to come away being any kind of expert. Think of it as pub level arguments.
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